North Not Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break Up – Ango Abdullahi

Again, former Vice Chancellor of the Ahmadu Bello University and Secretary of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF), Professor Ango Abdullahi has said the North is not afraid of Nigeria breaking up, stressing that the north is prepared to go back to the pre 1914 arrangement.

The elder statesman who represented the Chief Paul Unongo, chairman of the Northern Elders Forum , bared his mind at a two-day conference with the theme: “The North and the future of the Nigerian Federation” organised by the Arewa Research and Development Project (ARDP) .

He “If we can’t go back to1914, we should go back to 1960, regional governance. North is not afraid of getting its North back, just Iike those that want East and West. I see this as a political manoeuvre and the North will not take it,” he said.

He further stated that although restructuring means different things to different people, in his opinion, it would not make any difference, because the problem is not really in the structure, but the managers of the country.

“Restructuring means so many things to many people, but to me, I am not speaking for Unongo or NEF, when I was confronted about this, by people from the South. We sat with Prof Nwabueze and he said Nigeria is unbalanced and Lugard made mistake by amalgamation and North has always dominated that’s why they asked for national conference in 2014.

“We reminded him that the North has always sacrificed for the unity of Nigeria. I was a student when we got independence and we saw that each time there was need to unite, Nigeria, the North made the largest sacrifice,” he stressed.

He explained that the north has always wanted a peaceful country.

“Now we have 36 states from three regions which existed in 1960. No country has had constitutional conference like Nigeria, yet it has not created basis for a united country.

“We ought to have realized from that, that the failure of operators of the country. If we want to restructure Nigeria, we have to start from the beginning, 1914, North and South, let’s go our separate ways,” he emphasized.

He said that such clamouring is not new, because it has always been the practice from of the South whenever a Northerner was in charge of leadership.

“Things happening since 1999 to 2006 tazarce, and 2015 when a party agreed that Presidency should rotate, and that was the beginning of what we saw.

“Some of our various formations were unhappy with what was happening to the North, we decided that we must confront it and thanks to our efforts we succeeded in changing leadership.”